- Sort Score
- Result 10 results
- Languages All
Results 891 - 900 of 1,533 for Example (0.08 sec)
-
guava/src/com/google/common/graph/ElementOrder.java
import java.util.Map; import javax.annotation.CheckForNull; /** * Used to represent the order of elements in a data structure that supports different options for * iteration order guarantees. * * <p>Example usage: * * <pre>{@code * MutableGraph<Integer> graph = * GraphBuilder.directed().nodeOrder(ElementOrder.<Integer>natural()).build(); * }</pre> * * @author Joshua O'Madadhain * @since 20.0 */
Registered: Fri Nov 01 12:43:10 UTC 2024 - Last Modified: Wed Oct 16 17:21:56 UTC 2024 - 6.7K bytes - Viewed (0) -
guava/src/com/google/common/cache/LongAdder.java
* concurrently updating. */ public void reset() { internalReset(0L); } /** * Equivalent in effect to {@link #sum} followed by {@link #reset}. This method may apply for * example during quiescent points between multithreaded computations. If there are updates * concurrent with this method, the returned value is not guaranteed to be the final * value occurring before the reset. *
Registered: Fri Nov 01 12:43:10 UTC 2024 - Last Modified: Tue Jun 15 18:00:07 UTC 2021 - 5.5K bytes - Viewed (0) -
docs/fr/docs/advanced/additional-responses.md
Par exemple, vous pouvez déclarer une réponse avec un code HTTP `404` qui utilise un modèle Pydantic et a une `description` personnalisée. Et une réponse avec un code HTTP `200` qui utilise votre `response_model`, mais inclut un `example` personnalisé : ```Python hl_lines="20-31" {!../../docs_src/additional_responses/tutorial003.py!} ```
Registered: Sun Nov 03 07:19:11 UTC 2024 - Last Modified: Sun Oct 06 20:36:54 UTC 2024 - 9.6K bytes - Viewed (0) -
guava-testlib/src/com/google/common/testing/ForwardingWrapperTester.java
/** * Tester to ensure forwarding wrapper works by delegating calls to the corresponding method with * the same parameters forwarded and return value forwarded back or exception propagated as is. * * <p>For example: * * <pre>{@code * new ForwardingWrapperTester().testForwarding(Foo.class, new Function<Foo, Foo>() { * public Foo apply(Foo foo) { * return new ForwardingFoo(foo); * } * }); * }</pre> *
Registered: Fri Nov 01 12:43:10 UTC 2024 - Last Modified: Thu Oct 17 13:00:28 UTC 2024 - 9.1K bytes - Viewed (0) -
tests/test_tutorial/test_security/test_tutorial005_an.py
) assert response.status_code == 200, response.text assert response.json() == { "username": "johndoe", "full_name": "John Doe", "email": "johndoe@example.com", "disabled": False, } def test_incorrect_token(): response = client.get("/users/me", headers={"Authorization": "Bearer nonexistent"}) assert response.status_code == 401, response.text
Registered: Sun Nov 03 07:19:11 UTC 2024 - Last Modified: Wed Mar 13 19:07:10 UTC 2024 - 15.4K bytes - Viewed (0) -
docs/en/docs/async.md
--- Common examples of CPU bound operations are things that require complex math processing. For example: * **Audio** or **image processing**.
Registered: Sun Nov 03 07:19:11 UTC 2024 - Last Modified: Wed Aug 28 23:33:37 UTC 2024 - 23.5K bytes - Viewed (0) -
compat/maven-artifact/src/main/java/org/apache/maven/artifact/versioning/ComparableVersion.java
* </ul> * Unknown qualifiers are considered after known qualifiers, with lexical order (always case insensitive), * </li> * <li>a hyphen usually precedes a qualifier, and is always less important than digits/number, for example * {@code 1.0.RC2 < 1.0-RC3 < 1.0.1}; but prefer {@code 1.0.0-RC1} over {@code 1.0.0.RC1}, and more * generally: {@code 1.0.X2 < 1.0-X3 < 1.0.1} for any string {@code X}; but prefer {@code 1.0.0-X1}
Registered: Sun Nov 03 03:35:11 UTC 2024 - Last Modified: Fri Oct 25 12:31:46 UTC 2024 - 26K bytes - Viewed (0) -
guava/src/com/google/common/graph/Network.java
* * <p>If this network {@link #allowsParallelEdges() allows parallel edges}, parallel edges will be * treated as if collapsed into a single edge. For example, the {@link #degree(Object)} of a node * in the {@link Graph} view may be less than the degree of the same node in this {@link Network}. */ Graph<N> asGraph(); // // Network properties //
Registered: Fri Nov 01 12:43:10 UTC 2024 - Last Modified: Thu Oct 10 15:41:27 UTC 2024 - 22.4K bytes - Viewed (0) -
docs/em/docs/advanced/openapi-callbacks.md
## 🔬 ⏲ ☑ ⏲ 📟 🔜 🪀 🙇 🔛 👆 👍 🛠️ 📱. & ⚫️ 🔜 🎲 🪀 📚 ⚪️➡️ 1️⃣ 📱 ⏭. ⚫️ 💪 1️⃣ ⚖️ 2️⃣ ⏸ 📟, 💖: ```Python callback_url = "https://example.com/api/v1/invoices/events/" httpx.post(callback_url, json={"description": "Invoice paid", "paid": True}) ``` ✋️ 🎲 🏆 ⚠ 🍕 ⏲ ⚒ 💭 👈 👆 🛠️ 👩💻 (🔢 👩💻) 🛠️ *🔢 🛠️* ☑, 🛄 💽 👈 *👆 🛠️* 🔜 📨 📨 💪 ⏲, ♒️.
Registered: Sun Nov 03 07:19:11 UTC 2024 - Last Modified: Sun Oct 06 20:36:54 UTC 2024 - 6.6K bytes - Viewed (0) -
docs/en/docs/tutorial/security/get-current-user.md
Just use any kind of model, any kind of class, any kind of database that you need for your application. **FastAPI** has you covered with the dependency injection system. ## Code size This example might seem verbose. Keep in mind that we are mixing security, data models, utility functions and *path operations* in the same file. But here's the key point. The security and dependency injection stuff is written once.
Registered: Sun Nov 03 07:19:11 UTC 2024 - Last Modified: Sun Oct 06 20:36:54 UTC 2024 - 7.4K bytes - Viewed (0)